Recall that portals are web-based entryways that on-line health consumers can reportedly use to access their records, request medications, correspond with their doctors, manage their health conditions, reduce health care costs, increase U.S. life expectancy, reduce our national dependency on jumbo-sized sugary drinks and fix everything else that ails the U.S. health system.

In particular, any impact on diabetes care was short-lived or nonexistent, patients with heart failure had no meaningful improvement, blood pressure control did not improve and adherence to prevention recommendations were marginal. One observational study found persons with heart failure were more likely to use the emergency room. The only study that found any benefit involved a single randomized control trial that examined the impact of portals in the co-management of depression.

After looking at this review, depressed advocates of EHR portals may have to personally use their own portals to communicate with their docs health care medical neighborhood.

The only good news is that there were some data that suggested that a substantial number of consumers liked using the portals. But the DMCB likes channel surfing too, but that doesn't mean that the spouse agrees that its television-watching quality has improved or that the cost of all those premium channels is moderating.

The authors pointed out that it was difficult to isolate the impact of a portal vs. a portal plus care management. To the DMCB, that means that portals are at best a means-to-an-end of enabling care managers to better communicate with their enrollees.